Extended ListView

An extended ListView control that can show multiple images on subitems, lets the user edit subitems with user-defined controls (also image-subitems), contains boolean subitems, and can sort columns by date, number, string, and image.

Introduction

There are many examples here on The Code Project that enhance the functionality of the ListView. I was looking for a way to display and edit multiple images on subitems and be able to sort the ListView by date, number, string, and images, but I wasn't able to find one that could do that. The subitems also had to be editable - either by a textbox, or by a user defined control. Finally, I wanted to be able to add controls to the subitems and provide some kind of "boolean" columns. The subitems that are in such a boolean column will be able to show two values - true or false - that can be represented by two images. If you set the Editable property to true, the user can click such a subitem and the value switches.

Background

Previously, you had to use the Win32 API to accomplish the above. Now, with version 2.0 of the .NET framework, this can be much easily done with the concept of ownerdraw. If the OwnerDraw property of a ListView is set to false, you can do all of the drawing of the ListView yourself. In this EXListView class, I use ownerdraw extensively. Although using the Win32 API is faster than using ownerdraw from the .NET framework, this ListView is still fast, even with 1000 items with subitems that contain multiple images.

Using the code

The code accompanying this article is the EXListView class, the EXComboBox class, and a simple form that uses these in a form. I added an executable, but you can easily compile it yourself with the command csc /t:winexe /r:System.Windows.Forms.dll EXListView.cs EXComboBox.cs MyForms.cs - the compiler csc.exe can be found on Windows XP in C:\WINDOWS\Microsoft.NET\Framework\v2.0.50727\.

Defining an instance and adding columns

If you have created an instance of the EXListView class (for example: EXListView exlstv = new EXListView()), you can begin adding columns. There are three different types of columns: EXColumnHeader, EXEditableColumnHeader (whose subitems can be edited by a default TextBox or a user defined control), and the EXBoolColumnHeader (whose subitems can only show true or false and can optionally be edited).

For example, to get a column header that can be edited by a default TextBox, you do:

EXEditableColumnHeader editcol =
new EXEditableColumnHeader("Movie");

If you want to specify a control by which the subitems can be edited, you do:

// define a control to edit the subitems of this column
ComboBox cmbx = new ComboBox();
cmbx.Items.AddRange(newstring[] {"1", "2", "3", "4"});
// define a columnheader whose subitems can be edited
EXEditableColumnHeader editcol =
new EXEditableColumnHeader("Position");
// add the combobox to the column
editcol.MyControl = cmbx;

A boolean column:

EXBoolColumnHeader boolcol = new EXBoolColumnHeader("OK");
// if you want the users to be able to edit
// the boolean values, set the Editable property to true
boolcol.Editable = true;
// specify an image for each of the values
boolcol.TrueImage = Image.FromFile("true.png");
boolcol.FalseImage = Image.FromFile("false.png");

Add (sub)items to the EXListView

A regular ListViewItem:

EXListViewItem lstvitem = new EXListViewItem("Pete");

Items and subitems that can show images have a property MyValue that can hold the real textual value of the (sub)item. This can be handy if you don't want to show text, but need some kind of value, for example, to insert into a database.

Add and remove images during runtime

If you want to add or remove images during runtime, you can just set the MyImage property to null, or, in the case of a multiple-images (sub)item, use the ArrayList methods, such as Add() and RemoveAt(). Examples:

If you want to remove the second image from an EXMulitpleImagesListViewSubItem (second column) in the third row, you do:

Adjusting the heights of rows

Because all the drawing is done in the owner-draw events, the SmallImageList property is only used to show the up and down arrows in the column headers and not to show images in the ListViewItem. To adjust the row height, you assign an ImageList and set the Size to the appropriate size. This is a dirty hack, but the only way I could do it. If you can find another way - please let me know.

Adding controls

To add a control to a subitem, create a EXControlListViewSubItem, then create the control, add the EXControlListViewSubItem to the listviewitem, and at last, add the control to the EXControlListViewSubItem with the EXListView method AddControlToSubitem:

Points of interest

There is, at this point, an irritating bug in the EXListView class: when you move your mouse pointer into the ListView from left to right, the DrawItem event will be fired, but accompanied by the DrawSubItem event. So, the ListViewItem will be repainted, but the subitems will not. If the content of the ListViewItem (represented by the first subitem) is larger than the column, the content falls over the neighboring subitems.

History

Created on 9 February 2006.

Updated code and article: now you can edit columns with images as well - 15 February 2006.

License

This article has no explicit license attached to it but may contain usage terms in the article text or the download files themselves. If in doubt please contact the author via the discussion board below.